TX13: State showed exigency for BAC without SW because it would have taken one of two officers off-duty

The state showed exigency in not getting a search warrant for defendant’s BAC after a serious car crash left him unconscious. It would have taken hours to get the warrant back then [2013] and it would have taken one of two officers on the local force out of circulation during a business night, and it was a reasonable choice on their part to go with exigency and not get the warrant. State v. Ruiz, 2021 Tex. App. LEXIS 1837 (Tex. App. – Corpus Christi – Edinburg Mar. 11, 2021).

“Here, Roberts fails to overcome the presumption that his trial counsel’s failure to file a motion to suppress the search warrant was not sound trial strategy, and he further fails to show that any motion to suppress would have been meritorious. Roberts has not explained on what grounds such a motion would have been meritorious. It is fair to assume from Roberts’ description of his conversations with his counsel that his counsel concluded that the filing of a motion to suppress would have been futile.” Roberts v. United States, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45417 (S.D. Ind. Mar. 11, 2021).*

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